Europeās largest 3D-printed building is scheduled for completion in July in Heidelberg, Germany.
Spearheaded by Kraus Group, a local real estate developer, investor, and manager, this 6,600-sf project is being constructed for Heidelberg IT Management GmbH and Company KG, a cloud and data center provider. The building will contain an IT server hotel.
PERI 3D Construction is using a BOD2 3D construction printer to print the buildingās walls, which PERI estimates will take only 140 hours to complete, or the equivalent of printing four square meters of building per hour.
The printer robots are provided by COBOD, which produced Europeās first 3D-printed building in 2017 and has sold more than 65 3D printers worldwide. Denmark-based COBODās key shareholders include General Electric, CEMEX, Holcim Group, and PERI, the latter of which first used a BOD2 machine in 2020.
Looking to print taller buildings
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The Heidelberg project is 162 ft long by 121 ft wide by 30 ft high. Its construction started on March 31. Hans-Jƶrg Kraus, managing partner of Kraus Group, said in a prepared statement that this project represents his firmās commitment to innovative and sustainable construction methods.
Henrik Lund-Nielsen, COBODās founder and GM, added that the two key benefits of 3D printing for construction are speed of execution and design freedom, noting that other projects his companyās printers have been used for include residential housing in Africa and offices in Germany.
The Heidelberg data centerās architects are SSV Architekten and Mense Korte. Heidelberg Materials is supplying an estimated 450 tons of its i.tech 3D printing mortar for this project, which is 100 percent recyclable and contains a binder with a carbon footprint thatās 55 percent lower than Portland cement.
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Construction Europe magazineās website reports that without 3D printing, the unusual design of the buildingās walls would have required customized form work. COBODās 3D printing system is currently limited to around 9 meters in height, and the company is reportedly working on new technology that will allow its robots to print at taller heights. (The worldās tallest 3D-printed building to date is the three-story, 9.9-meter-high Dar Arkan villa in Saudi Arabia.)
The cost of the Heidelberg project was not disclosed.
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